Organizer: Cornell University
Lecture Series: Gatty Lecture Series
Description:
Many countries select civil servants via examinations. In this talk, Nicholas Kuipers argues that the outcomes of these tests prompt attitudinal shifts on the part of winners and losers—particularly when successful applicants disproportionately hail from specific ethnic, racial, or religious groups. Looking at Indonesia, Kuipers will present evidence in support of this argument from a survey conducted in partnership with the Indonesian civil service agency, in which solicited survey responses from applicants for civil service jobs. Matching responses to the database of test scores, Kuipers shows that individuals who failed the exam are more likely to (1) support preferential treatment for in-groups, (2) reflect negatively on an ethnically inclusive national identity, and (3) believe the recruitment process was corrupt. Building on these empirical results, Kuipers conclude by presenting a reconceptualization of the decision to implement civil service reform as a trade-off between the twinned demands of state-building and nation-building.
Speaker:
Nicholas Kuipers is an Assistant Professor of Political Science and Presidential Young Professor at the National University of Singapore. His research is on understanding how institutions structure political attitudes and has been published or is forthcoming in journals such as the American Political Science Review, the British Journal of Political Science, Perspectives on Politics, and World Politics. Nicholas received his Ph.D from the University of California, Berkeley, and was previously a predoctoral scholar at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law at Stanford University.
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